Billa Flint House, 180 Coleman Street, Belleville Designated Sites, Belleville, ON
Excerpt from discoverbelleville.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/COB-Heri...:
Billa Flint House, 180 Coleman Street (designated 1990):
Built for Billa Flint in 1835. Two storey brick house with a three bay facade with the entrance in the left-hand bay. The front door- way opening was obviously wide enough for side lights but the sides have been narrowed with modern brick. Investigation inside shows that these side spaces were blind; perhaps occupied by panelling or more likely by half-columns. The roof shows four thick places in the parapet ends, like the bases of chimneys, but no trace of flues visible in the rooms. All four have been reconstructed to restore the house’s skyline. Window glazing, 12 over 12, appears to be the original in the three upper front windows and at lower right. Old maps show at least two different kitchen wings on the back in different configurations. There was only one opening on the south side of the main block originally. Flint was a general merchant in Belleville in 1829, and also established a large lumbering business at the mouth of the Moira River. Flint was President of the Belleville Police Board in 1836, Mayor of Belleville for three years, and Warden of Hastings County in 1873. From 1847 until his death in 1894 he represented the area in the Canadian government, becoming a Senator in 1867.
Billa Flint House, 180 Coleman Street, Belleville Designated Sites, Belleville, ON
Excerpt from discoverbelleville.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/COB-Heri...:
Billa Flint House, 180 Coleman Street (designated 1990):
Built for Billa Flint in 1835. Two storey brick house with a three bay facade with the entrance in the left-hand bay. The front door- way opening was obviously wide enough for side lights but the sides have been narrowed with modern brick. Investigation inside shows that these side spaces were blind; perhaps occupied by panelling or more likely by half-columns. The roof shows four thick places in the parapet ends, like the bases of chimneys, but no trace of flues visible in the rooms. All four have been reconstructed to restore the house’s skyline. Window glazing, 12 over 12, appears to be the original in the three upper front windows and at lower right. Old maps show at least two different kitchen wings on the back in different configurations. There was only one opening on the south side of the main block originally. Flint was a general merchant in Belleville in 1829, and also established a large lumbering business at the mouth of the Moira River. Flint was President of the Belleville Police Board in 1836, Mayor of Belleville for three years, and Warden of Hastings County in 1873. From 1847 until his death in 1894 he represented the area in the Canadian government, becoming a Senator in 1867.